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Pictish Trail - Life Slime
Release Date: 10/04/26
Life Slime is the sixth full-length album from Pictish Trail (aka Johnny Lynch), produced by Mike Lindsay (Tunng, LUMP) for Fire Records. Written on the Isle of Eigg and recorded in Margate, it’s a strange, tender and psychedelic electro-pop journey shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal. The record refines Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped pop melodies, baggy psych rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting, balancing woozy synth-pop, motorik propulsion and intimate acoustic moments. Across its highlights—the guilt-stained ballad Hold It, the life-affirming shimmer of Infinity Ooze, the late-night confession Torch Song, the expansive eight-minute centrepiece Another Way and the cinematic closer Werewolf Ending—Life Slime charts a path from emotional fracture to uneasy release. Sorry Eyes struts with punchy electro-pop bite, Crystal Cave drifts through crystalline guitars and shoegaze haze into transformation, and the title track moves with a slow, weary swagger toward bittersweet acceptance. For fans of Hot Chip, The Flaming Lips, Liars, Mercury Rev, Beck, John Grant, Empire of the Sun and Grandaddy. Press highlights: “Endlessly inventive” — Uncut. “Wonderfully weird pop” — Brooklyn Vegan. “A favourite artist of ours” — Lauren Laverne, BBC 6 Music. Tracklist: 1. Hold It 2. Life Slime 3. Toxic Spillage 4. Battery Pack 5. Another Way 6. Sorry Eyes 7. Infinity Ooze 8. Crystal Cave 9. Torch Song 10. Werewolf Ending
Life Slime is the sixth full-length album from Pictish Trail (aka Johnny Lynch), produced by Mike Lindsay (Tunng, LUMP) for Fire Records. Written on the Isle of Eigg and recorded in Margate, it’s a strange, tender and psychedelic electro-pop journey shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal. The record refines Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped pop melodies, baggy psych rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting, balancing woozy synth-pop, motorik propulsion and intimate acoustic moments. Across its highlights—the guilt-stained ballad Hold It, the life-affirming shimmer of Infinity Ooze, the late-night confession Torch Song, the expansive eight-minute centrepiece Another Way and the cinematic closer Werewolf Ending—Life Slime charts a path from emotional fracture to uneasy release. Sorry Eyes struts with punchy electro-pop bite, Crystal Cave drifts through crystalline guitars and shoegaze haze into transformation, and the title track moves with a slow, weary swagger toward bittersweet acceptance. For fans of Hot Chip, The Flaming Lips, Liars, Mercury Rev, Beck, John Grant, Empire of the Sun and Grandaddy. Press highlights: “Endlessly inventive” — Uncut. “Wonderfully weird pop” — Brooklyn Vegan. “A favourite artist of ours” — Lauren Laverne, BBC 6 Music. Tracklist: 1. Hold It 2. Life Slime 3. Toxic Spillage 4. Battery Pack 5. Another Way 6. Sorry Eyes 7. Infinity Ooze 8. Crystal Cave 9. Torch Song 10. Werewolf Ending
Release Date: 10/04/26
Life Slime is the sixth full-length album from Pictish Trail (aka Johnny Lynch), produced by Mike Lindsay (Tunng, LUMP) for Fire Records. Written on the Isle of Eigg and recorded in Margate, it’s a strange, tender and psychedelic electro-pop journey shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal. The record refines Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped pop melodies, baggy psych rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting, balancing woozy synth-pop, motorik propulsion and intimate acoustic moments. Across its highlights—the guilt-stained ballad Hold It, the life-affirming shimmer of Infinity Ooze, the late-night confession Torch Song, the expansive eight-minute centrepiece Another Way and the cinematic closer Werewolf Ending—Life Slime charts a path from emotional fracture to uneasy release. Sorry Eyes struts with punchy electro-pop bite, Crystal Cave drifts through crystalline guitars and shoegaze haze into transformation, and the title track moves with a slow, weary swagger toward bittersweet acceptance. For fans of Hot Chip, The Flaming Lips, Liars, Mercury Rev, Beck, John Grant, Empire of the Sun and Grandaddy. Press highlights: “Endlessly inventive” — Uncut. “Wonderfully weird pop” — Brooklyn Vegan. “A favourite artist of ours” — Lauren Laverne, BBC 6 Music. Tracklist: 1. Hold It 2. Life Slime 3. Toxic Spillage 4. Battery Pack 5. Another Way 6. Sorry Eyes 7. Infinity Ooze 8. Crystal Cave 9. Torch Song 10. Werewolf Ending
Life Slime is the sixth full-length album from Pictish Trail (aka Johnny Lynch), produced by Mike Lindsay (Tunng, LUMP) for Fire Records. Written on the Isle of Eigg and recorded in Margate, it’s a strange, tender and psychedelic electro-pop journey shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal. The record refines Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped pop melodies, baggy psych rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting, balancing woozy synth-pop, motorik propulsion and intimate acoustic moments. Across its highlights—the guilt-stained ballad Hold It, the life-affirming shimmer of Infinity Ooze, the late-night confession Torch Song, the expansive eight-minute centrepiece Another Way and the cinematic closer Werewolf Ending—Life Slime charts a path from emotional fracture to uneasy release. Sorry Eyes struts with punchy electro-pop bite, Crystal Cave drifts through crystalline guitars and shoegaze haze into transformation, and the title track moves with a slow, weary swagger toward bittersweet acceptance. For fans of Hot Chip, The Flaming Lips, Liars, Mercury Rev, Beck, John Grant, Empire of the Sun and Grandaddy. Press highlights: “Endlessly inventive” — Uncut. “Wonderfully weird pop” — Brooklyn Vegan. “A favourite artist of ours” — Lauren Laverne, BBC 6 Music. Tracklist: 1. Hold It 2. Life Slime 3. Toxic Spillage 4. Battery Pack 5. Another Way 6. Sorry Eyes 7. Infinity Ooze 8. Crystal Cave 9. Torch Song 10. Werewolf Ending
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Release Date: 10/04/26
Life Slime is the sixth full-length album from Pictish Trail (aka Johnny Lynch), produced by Mike Lindsay (Tunng, LUMP) for Fire Records. Written on the Isle of Eigg and recorded in Margate, it’s a strange, tender and psychedelic electro-pop journey shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal. The record refines Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped pop melodies, baggy psych rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting, balancing woozy synth-pop, motorik propulsion and intimate acoustic moments. Across its highlights—the guilt-stained ballad Hold It, the life-affirming shimmer of Infinity Ooze, the late-night confession Torch Song, the expansive eight-minute centrepiece Another Way and the cinematic closer Werewolf Ending—Life Slime charts a path from emotional fracture to uneasy release. Sorry Eyes struts with punchy electro-pop bite, Crystal Cave drifts through crystalline guitars and shoegaze haze into transformation, and the title track moves with a slow, weary swagger toward bittersweet acceptance. For fans of Hot Chip, The Flaming Lips, Liars, Mercury Rev, Beck, John Grant, Empire of the Sun and Grandaddy. Press highlights: “Endlessly inventive” — Uncut. “Wonderfully weird pop” — Brooklyn Vegan. “A favourite artist of ours” — Lauren Laverne, BBC 6 Music. Tracklist: 1. Hold It 2. Life Slime 3. Toxic Spillage 4. Battery Pack 5. Another Way 6. Sorry Eyes 7. Infinity Ooze 8. Crystal Cave 9. Torch Song 10. Werewolf Ending
Life Slime is the sixth full-length album from Pictish Trail (aka Johnny Lynch), produced by Mike Lindsay (Tunng, LUMP) for Fire Records. Written on the Isle of Eigg and recorded in Margate, it’s a strange, tender and psychedelic electro-pop journey shaped by transformation, exhaustion, hope, guilt and renewal. The record refines Lynch’s world of lo-fi electronics, warped pop melodies, baggy psych rhythms and emotionally direct songwriting, balancing woozy synth-pop, motorik propulsion and intimate acoustic moments. Across its highlights—the guilt-stained ballad Hold It, the life-affirming shimmer of Infinity Ooze, the late-night confession Torch Song, the expansive eight-minute centrepiece Another Way and the cinematic closer Werewolf Ending—Life Slime charts a path from emotional fracture to uneasy release. Sorry Eyes struts with punchy electro-pop bite, Crystal Cave drifts through crystalline guitars and shoegaze haze into transformation, and the title track moves with a slow, weary swagger toward bittersweet acceptance. For fans of Hot Chip, The Flaming Lips, Liars, Mercury Rev, Beck, John Grant, Empire of the Sun and Grandaddy. Press highlights: “Endlessly inventive” — Uncut. “Wonderfully weird pop” — Brooklyn Vegan. “A favourite artist of ours” — Lauren Laverne, BBC 6 Music. Tracklist: 1. Hold It 2. Life Slime 3. Toxic Spillage 4. Battery Pack 5. Another Way 6. Sorry Eyes 7. Infinity Ooze 8. Crystal Cave 9. Torch Song 10. Werewolf Ending















